Texas GOP Had an Elephant Stroll Through Their Convention. It Took a Massive...
Judge Smacks Down Lefty Boomer's Lawsuit Over Trump's UFC Fight and Cites a...
We Had Update in the Nancy Guthrie Case...Don't Get Too Excited
Nancy Mace Isn't Handling Her Crushing Defeat in the SC Primary Well
Standoff: Active Shooter in Texas Leaves One Dead, 11 Wounded; UPDATE: Suspect Dead
The ACLJ and Nearly 30 Organizations Are Defending a Pregnancy Resource Center Against...
California Dems Say You Can't Watch the World Cup If You Hate DEI
It Isn't Over. Spencer Pratt Just Declared War.
Elon Musk Just Became the World's First Trillionaire and the Socialists Are Already...
Vice President JD Vance Blasts 'Leaked' Iran Deal, Says Final Agreement Will Lead...
Rep. Anna Paulina Luna to Officially File to Void President Trump's First Impeachment
Former DNI Tulsi Gabbard Says American Taxpayers Funded Over 120 Biolabs Across the...
Jamaican National Charged With Using Fake Marriage, Army Service to Fraudulently Obtain US...
John Cornyn Renews His Attention-Seeking Temper Tantrum
EXCLUSIVE: Illegal Alien Charged With Child Sexual Abuse Faces ICE Detainer
OPINION

Cassidy’s Loss Is a Win for Rural Americans Who Depend on Successful 340B Drug-Discount Program

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Cassidy’s Loss Is a Win for Rural Americans Who Depend on Successful 340B Drug-Discount Program
AP Photo/Gerald Herbert

Recent Republican primaries have given us a lot to celebrate, as so many establishment candidates have lost to America First ones. One that’s caught a lot of attention is the loss of Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, who was such a RINO he could have applied for endangered species status.

Advertisement

This is the first time in nearly 15 years that a sitting U.S. senator lost a primary in a non-special election. But there’s an extra reason to cheer that Cassidy got scalped over the weekend. Cassidy was a long-time hater of 340B, a healthcare program that benefits mostly rural, Republican voters, including many of the Louisianans Cassidy is supposed to be representing.

We have talked about it here before. The 340B drug discount program has reduced outpatient costs, kept healthcare providers in rural America open, and cut costs for what many Americans pay for lifesaving medications. Started in 1992, 340B requires that drug manufacturers discount prices for medication sold to what are called covered entities: hospitals and clinics that treat a certain threshold of Medicaid patients.

340B was created with the idea that the government should use its leverage to get better deals rather than the other way around (which happens so much). So if drug companies want to bill Medicaid and Medicare for drugs they sell to entitlements—which are 100 percent paid for by taxpayers— they have to offer discounts as a swap.

Big Pharma hates 340B because it forces them to cut costs. They have spent the last few years attacking the program in the courts, online, and in Congress. As chance would have it, Cassidy became an enemy of the program about the same time his wife bought a lot of stock in Big Pharma.

Advertisement

Because Cassidy is chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions committee, his opposition to the program could have spelled doom for it. Late last year, he called for a congressional probe into the program, saying, “This investigation underscores that there are transparency and oversight concerns that prevent 340B discounts from translating to better access or lower costs for patients. Congress needs to act to bring much-needed reform to the 340B Program.”

An investigation of 340B is probably unnecessary (to the extent there are a few bad apples in a very large barrel, their identities are already well-known), but one outcome would be what we’ve known all along: it works.

According to healthcare consulting firm Trilliant, “In 2024, 507 out of the 1,779 hospitals evaluated had a negative operating margin but positive net income due to revenue from non-patient-related activities.” A major non-patient-related activity? According to Trilliant, retail pharmacy operations are a big one.

Providing healthcare in rural areas is precarious. Since 2005, 195 rural hospitals have closed, while another 65 have gone through “converted closures,” meaning services have been slashed or eliminated. Of those still functioning, it’s estimated that as many as 40 percent of rural clinics are in danger of closing.

Advertisement

There are approximately 140 hospitals just in Louisiana that actively participate as 340B covered entities – about one-third of the hospitals in the state. Patients who can benefit from 340B’s discounts often see their medication costs plummet, according to one 2024 study, which reported, “At Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center in Baton Rouge, uninsured patients pay an average of just $7.77 for retail prescriptions and $48.05 for specialty medications (compared to non-340B prices of $78.13 and $3,937.10, respectively).”

Around 30 percent of Louisianans live in rural areas, and almost 20 percent of Louisianans live below the poverty level. So it shouldn’t be a surprise that the Louisiana state legislature passed a 340B protection law in 2023, and that law was upheld in appeals court earlier this year.

But Big Pharma doesn’t want to let a little thing like laws and court rulings stand between them and their profits. (Remember, this is the same sector that condemned the whole world to ruin in 2020 so they could become billionaires off the “pandemic.”) Big Pharma has tried to trick Trump voters into opposing the very program that helps them with insinuations that it’s abused by illegal immigrants and the transgender industrial complex. People mostly seem to have seen through the lies, remembering also that Big Pharma is happy to exploit illegal immigrants and profit from transgender mutilations when it suits them.

Advertisement

Rep. Julia Letlow, the Trump-backed candidate, and state Treasurer John Fleming advanced to a runoff that will take place on June 27. One hopes that whoever wins the runoff they will support the 340B program for their fellow Louisianians and the rest of America. Big Pharma would hate it.

Editor's Note: Do you enjoy Townhall's conservative reporting that takes on the radical Left and woke media? Support our work so that we can continue to bring you the truth.

Join Townhall VIP and use promo code FIGHT to receive 60% off your membership.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement